Obama says new budget rules will rein in spending

WASHINGTON — President Barack Obama said Saturday new budget rules that say spending cuts must accompany spending increases will force Congress to "pay for what it spends, just like everybody else."

Obama signed a bill Friday reinstating budget rules known as "paygo" — short for "pay as you go."

In place during the 1990s, the rules helped create balanced budgets and surpluses. Obama blames eliminating them for creating much of the $1.3 trillion deficit he faced upon taking office in January 2009 and for a total debt of $8 trillion projected over the next decade.

The president has been trying to show a public alarmed by higher government spending in the midst of an economic downturn that he is taking steps to tighten Washington's purse strings. But the bill also lifted the cap on the amount of money the United States can borrow by $1.9 trillion — to a total of $14.3 trillion. The ceiling was lifted to keep the United States from going into default.

In his weekly radio and Internet address, Obama said the "politics of the moment" often overwhelms the desire Democrats and Republicans have to produce balanced budgets — something the federal government legally is not required to do. "Now, Congress will have to pay for what it spends, just like everybody else."

Obama did not discuss raising the debt ceiling in his message.

Republicans mocked Obama for signing the "paygo" bill behind closed doors. "With a simple stroke of his pen, President Obama now has the ability to continue his binge spending agenda to the tune of an additional $1.9 trillion, the largest one-time increase in our history," Republican Party chairman Michael Steele said Friday. "Taxpayers will continue to foot the bill for the Democrats' fiscal irresponsibility."